I'd like to see you explain in more detail as well. Do you take issue with the J2EE spec itself or the current implmentations of the spec? If it is such crap, how do you explain its popularity? And who are these cooks that you speak of?
Wouldn't it have been a lot cheaper and easier just to leave a bag of flaming dog poo on the professor's front step? Or make a phony phone call a la Homer style
Homer: "Hello Dean, you're a stupid head."
Dean: "Homer, is that you?" (Looks out the window and sees him a the pay phone right outside the office.)
But few cases have been successfully prosecuted under state laws, partly because spammers hide their identities -- by forging e-mail headers and routing information or by relaying spam through an unsuspecting host. That makes it hard to pinpoint the humans responsible for sending out the illegal missives.
Can we really stop spam through policial solutions? Seems like things must be done on a technical level first before laws can become effective.
I am still trying to figure out what "go more GUI" means. Sounds like something you would encounter at a Dairy Queen:
Mr. Jinkens: "I'd like a large vinilla cone." Register Girl: "Would you like to go more gooey for an extra 40 cents?" Mr. Jinkens: "Baby, you just read my mind."
I guess this guy has never heard of two little known projects called KDE and GNOME that will one day bring "a whole lotta GUI" to the Linux enviornment, not to mention increase profits by one miiiiiillion dolllars. <raise_pinky/>
Yeah, yet another crazy slasdot poster, not understanding the concept of sarcasm. (an English to English dictionary may help you understand this comment)
I once saw a show on this on the Food Network, it's called Mario Eats Italy. Basiclly he goes around Italy and finds different recipies and talks about the history and culture of the region and some of the different foods that they eat. A really great show if you are into Italian food or Italian culture.
Anyway, there was one show where they visited a coffee factory. Man, these guys take coffee seriously. They had people checking the beans to make sure they are the right color, size, etc. They also had this one room where a group of people do nothing but taste batches of coffee all day long. Hopefully, they medical fully covers medication for insomnia.
Also, if you ask for a latte over there, you'll get a glass of milk. And if I remember corretly, if you want what we refer to as a latte, you have to ask for a cafe americano. Crazy Italians.
I did something similiar (in terms of security) when I was developing a client/server app. What I did was trap for the backspace key after entering the first and last letter of a password, for instance if your password was "monkeyfeces", you would have to type "m(backspace)monkeyfeces(backspace)s". That way, if someone knew your password, watched you type it in or even had some rouge program monitoring your keystrokes they would still have a tough time figuring out why your password doesn't work. I am not saying this is foolproof but it's better than the man with the rubber glove who isn't suprisingly gentle.
About as funny as the 15 year old donor who died from the allergic reaction, right? Or about as funny as when a mother watches her daughter choke to death because she doesn't know what to do?
1. The liver is the most bad ass organ in all the land (aside from the brain), responsible for over 500 bodily functions.
2. The liver produces complex proteins from amino acids. It wouldn't be uncommon for the transplanted liver to produce IgE (immunoglobulin E) which, if I remember correctly, is what causes the reaction that causes anaphylactic shock (fancy term for bad allergic reaction).
Each of these cells, however, has two copies of the x-chromosome. Only one of these is useful.
This is not true, both Xs are perfectly viable. One contains the gene for tan, the other for black. One X gets switched off in each of the cells at random. Then, when each cell divides, the X chromosome that was turned off continues to be switched off in all of the progeny cells. The skin cells that are produced from these cells will express the color of the X chromosome that was not turned off.
The white coloring is caused by epistatis, or the overriding of one gene by another. Also, in some cats, temperature plays a part on which color the coat will be.
Does anyone know if the mtDNA (DNA located in the mitochondium of cells) was cloned as well? I yet to find any information about mtDNA in any cloning experiment let alone this one. If the mtDNA in Rainbow is different than the mtDNA in CC, are they really genetic clones?
If you intend to have this rendered on photo paper using an on-line printing service the black background makes for a nice poster though.
Do you have any recommendations for who to use to do this? Do I have to convert to an EPS file (I had to do this for my business cards). Any idea how much it costs?
There is a free edition and an enterprise edition. I haven't downloaded it yet but it looks like the free edition gives you most of the features of the enterprise one.
I'd like to see you explain in more detail as well. Do you take issue with the J2EE spec itself or the current implmentations of the spec? If it is such crap, how do you explain its popularity? And who are these cooks that you speak of?
Homer: "Hello Dean, you're a stupid head."
Dean: "Homer, is that you?" (Looks out the window and sees him a the pay phone right outside the office.)
Homer: "Aaaaah!" (Runs away)
Unfortunately, they will also bring you to a halt as well.
Code Complete
Both should be easy enough for high schoolers to follow.
What's the difference between using WatCom's complier and GNU's? How do you make a choice over which compiler to use?
Can we really stop spam through policial solutions? Seems like things must be done on a technical level first before laws can become effective.
7 is equal to 10 - 20 for signifigantly large values of 7.
Mr. Jinkens: "I'd like a large vinilla cone."
Register Girl: "Would you like to go more gooey for an extra 40 cents?"
Mr. Jinkens: "Baby, you just read my mind."
I guess this guy has never heard of two little known projects called KDE and GNOME that will one day bring "a whole lotta GUI" to the Linux enviornment, not to mention increase profits by one miiiiiillion dolllars. <raise_pinky/>
Either crawl their way up to middle management or spend their patheic lives coding somebody else's shitty design.
Yeah, yet another crazy slasdot poster, not understanding the concept of sarcasm. (an English to English dictionary may help you understand this comment)
Anyway, there was one show where they visited a coffee factory. Man, these guys take coffee seriously. They had people checking the beans to make sure they are the right color, size, etc. They also had this one room where a group of people do nothing but taste batches of coffee all day long. Hopefully, they medical fully covers medication for insomnia.
Also, if you ask for a latte over there, you'll get a glass of milk. And if I remember corretly, if you want what we refer to as a latte, you have to ask for a cafe americano. Crazy Italians.
No, no, no, it's "I like my coffee like i like my women... black and drunk."
I did something similiar (in terms of security) when I was developing a client/server app. What I did was trap for the backspace key after entering the first and last letter of a password, for instance if your password was "monkeyfeces", you would have to type "m(backspace)monkeyfeces(backspace)s". That way, if someone knew your password, watched you type it in or even had some rouge program monitoring your keystrokes they would still have a tough time figuring out why your password doesn't work. I am not saying this is foolproof but it's better than the man with the rubber glove who isn't suprisingly gentle.
Most bad ass organ in all the land?
o Brain
o Heart
o Liver
o Kidney
o Skin
o CowboyNeal's flacid organ
Jackass.
2. The liver produces complex proteins from amino acids. It wouldn't be uncommon for the transplanted liver to produce IgE (immunoglobulin E) which, if I remember correctly, is what causes the reaction that causes anaphylactic shock (fancy term for bad allergic reaction).
Each of these cells, however, has two copies of the x-chromosome. Only one of these is useful.
This is not true, both Xs are perfectly viable. One contains the gene for tan, the other for black. One X gets switched off in each of the cells at random. Then, when each cell divides, the X chromosome that was turned off continues to be switched off in all of the progeny cells. The skin cells that are produced from these cells will express the color of the X chromosome that was not turned off.
The white coloring is caused by epistatis, or the overriding of one gene by another. Also, in some cats, temperature plays a part on which color the coat will be.
Does anyone know if the mtDNA (DNA located in the mitochondium of cells) was cloned as well? I yet to find any information about mtDNA in any cloning experiment let alone this one. If the mtDNA in Rainbow is different than the mtDNA in CC, are they really genetic clones?
This is why I do my own plumbing. Anyone who puts their toilet main in the hands of other is surley misguided at best.
Hmmmmmmmm, HGH. Sweet taste, some gigantism.
"Unfortunately all links are in Dutch..."
The links are in Dutch. Ishint dat weird?
My email address wasn't harvested because I lost it in a shmelting accident.
"I'm Rick Belluzzo and I'm the former president and chief operating officer of Microsoft Corp."
www.linux.com/switch
"Notice that the mating process has nothing to do with the constraints placed on valid organisms."
I wish more women would read Slashdot. Chalk one up for the "Size Doesn't Matter" team.
"I chose single-point crossover as the method of mating because it is simple & generic."
I choose doggie style for the same reasons.
If you intend to have this rendered on photo paper using an on-line printing service the black background makes for a nice poster though.
Do you have any recommendations for who to use to do this? Do I have to convert to an EPS file (I had to do this for my business cards). Any idea how much it costs?
Two Editions
There is a free edition and an enterprise edition. I haven't downloaded it yet but it looks like the free edition gives you most of the features of the enterprise one.